"I would argue the country, as a whole, is still firmly secular, liberal in the Nehruvian idea, which is that we need a country which is open to different religions, to different ethnicities, to different beliefs if we are to stay together"

Now on the question of a country as heterogeneous as India being open to different ethnicities and beliefs -

There is by and large a consensus in India. Including within the BJP or the so-called Hindu Right

There is no voice in the BJP calling for the end of Islam in India

Sure...there may be elements within the Right who may dream of that at night. But it is not a major item on anyone's plate

So yes, India is v much multi-cultural, and has space for the so-called "Abrahamic cultures"

But that does NOT make India Nehruvian by any means

There are two tacit assumptions that underlie Nehruvian "idea of India" which Hindu nationalists reject -

A. That Nehru somehow rendered India multi-cultural
B. That Secularism entails separation of church and state

Let's tackle both

On A -

Nehru was not the person who rendered India multicultural

India has been a multi ethnic and multi-cultural nation for most of the past 3 millennia. And more so over the past 1000 years

And the reason this has been sustained over a long time, without large scale ethnic cleansing or attempts at homogenization is precisely because India is Hindu for the most part!

If India were Muslim, or even Christian, it would not have been a multi-religious nation

This has been the argument of most Hindu nationalists for much of 20th cen

India has to remain Hindu for it to retain its cultural exceptionalism in the globe

Parts of Greater India that are Muslim (say Pakistan or Bdesh) are not multi-religious

While India is

Parallels with "Anglo-American liberalism" is misplaced

Because in the Anglo American tradition, secularism stems from a certain skepticism towards religion (if not downright hostility)

Think Hobbes, Locke, Hume, Mill.
None were devout Christians

However, in India, religious tolerance and freedom is made possible by the nature of Hinduism

Not by forces of Enlightenment or religious skepticism of the kind that rendered Europe secular

Next we get to B - On the separation of religion and state

This is a tenet v central to Anglo American liberalism, as well as to Nehruvians

But the average Indian rejects this totally

Hinduism unlike Christianity envelopes many aspects of secular existence. And so does Islam in India in some ways

So separation of church and state is anathema to most Indians - and not just Hindus

That's because in India religion transcends faith. There are many atheists who may be sticklers for tradition. They are a common specimen in India unlike in the West

For those who may find these points very partisan, I only suggest you look at those parts of India that are not a part of the Indian Union currently.-

Pakistan & Bangladesh

Did either country remain multi-cultural and multi-religious in a meaningful sense? No

So yes there is ample religious freedom in India

But the continued existence of that freedom entails neither a secular Constitution nor an irreligious state!

Mr Rajan is wrong to conflate religious freedom in India with the Nehruvian "idea of India" (that Indians mostly reject)

We don't have a 25th amendment to apply to @SpeakerPelosi but we do have to begin to ask is she "mentally competent" She has grabbed power and control of our budget, boarder security and #SOTUS speech. This is "fascistic" In nature and destroying our country.

News reports say the body of the American who illegally reached North Sentinel Island only to be killed by the Sentinelese, is lying on the beach. Retrieving it is not easy. Leaving it there is to expose the zero immunity tribe to pathogens. This could turn into huge tragedy.

It is unthinkable that local fishermen ferried the American to N Sentinel Island. They know outsiders are prohibited and no contact with the zero immunity tribe is allowed. A&N Administration sleeping? Scores of intel agents specially depLoyed in A&N Islands playing golf?

Frankly, harsh punitive action is called for. There is supposed to be 24x7 patrolling and a foreigner on a fishing boat in a prohibited zone is easily spottable. Sadly, unlikely anybody will be punished. Police statements till now have been dishwater insipid.

The more you believe in the societal benefits of economic growth, the more meaning (& respect) you’ll find in work that boosts growth but doesn’t feel as directly rewarding—or look as noble—as, say, teaching (e.g. most finance, b2b SaaS, some crypto speculation).

And vice versa.

As such, Stubborn Attachments, Tyler Cowen’s uninhibited defense of economic growth, is an important book to wrestle with

I don't know if there's anything left to say about the concept of political correctness that hasn't already been said a thousand times over. Seems pretty clear to me that like "judicial activism", it's a meaningless term we use to discredit whatever we don't like.

Where things get interesting is when purveyors of the term, savvy to this problem and eager to distinguish political correctness from, say, civility, try to put the term on a firmer footing. You can see an example of this from @CathyYoung63 here.